trance
1
[ trans, trahns ]
/ træns, trɑns /
noun
verb (used with object), tranced, tranc·ing.
to put in a trance; stupefy.
to entrance; enrapture.
Origin of trance
1
1300–50; Middle English
traunce state of extreme dread, swoon, dazed state < Middle French
transe literally, passage (from life to death), derivative of
transir to go across, pass over < Latin
trānsīre, equivalent to
trāns-
trans- +
īre to go
OTHER WORDS FROM trance
tranced·ly [transt-lee, tran-sid-lee] /ˈtrænst li, ˈtræn sɪd li/, adverb trance·like, adjectiveWords nearby trance
tramping hut,
trample,
trampoline,
tramroad,
tramway,
trance,
trance out,
tranche,
tranchet,
tranexamic acid,
tranfd.
Definition for trance (2 of 2)
trance
2
or transe
[ trahns ]
/ trɑns /
noun
a passageway, as a hallway, alley, or the like.
verb (used without object), tranced, tranc·ing.
to move or walk rapidly or briskly.
Origin of trance
2
1325–75; Middle English (v.); origin uncertain
Example sentences from the Web for trance
British Dictionary definitions for trance
trance
/ (trɑːns) /
noun
verb
(tr)
to put into or as into a trance
Derived forms of trance
trancelike, adjectiveWord Origin for trance
C14: from Old French
transe, from
transir to faint, pass away, from Latin
trānsīre to go over, from
trans- +
īre to go
Medical definitions for trance
trance
[ trăns ]
n.
An altered state of consciousness as in hypnosis, catalepsy, or ecstasy.